Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
You're listening to the John Cobel podcast on the iHeartRadio app.
We have Alex Stone. He's in Idaho because today was
the day that Brian Coberger officially got sentenced and friends
and family were able to issue their victim impact statements
and some of the family members really went at Coburger.
(00:24):
If you remember, he's stabbed to death. Three University of
Idaho women, Madison Mogan, Kaylei Gonkalva's Zana Canoodle and a
boyfriend Ethan Chapin. Let's get let's get to Alex Stone
and talk about what he saw had heard today at
(00:44):
the hearing. Alex, how are you hey?
Speaker 3 (00:48):
They're John doing well?
Speaker 4 (00:49):
So yeah.
Speaker 3 (00:50):
Really, there were two kind of different moods among the
family members. There were those who were more retrospective and
looking at the emotional side of it and looking back
at the victims and what the families went through. One
of the surviving roommates, Dylan Mortenson, as she spoke and
talked about that, she said, he shattered me in ways
(01:12):
that I didn't know I could break. That She slept
in her mom's bedroom after this because she was afraid
to close her eyes, that she would wake up and
open her eyes and there would be a killer there.
She is one of the two roommates. She's the one
who saw the killer that night, described him as tall
and skinny. She just saw a figure in the darkness,
(01:34):
shadowy eyes, deep in set eyes, big bushy eyebrows. Up
until now until is guilty plea. His team has claimed
that that was not a reliable witness, that what she
described him, that that wasn't him. That's almost him to
a t, how she described him, what she saw that night.
But she told just a devastating account of how her
(01:54):
life has changed since these murders, and that she can't sleep,
she can't live her life. The other side, like the
Gonzalez family, they were angry. They don't like this deal.
They wanted this to go to trial. They wanted him
to get the death penalty, which here in Idaho come
next year, will be the firing squad as the main
method for the death penalty here. They wanted him to
(02:18):
have to go through all the testimony and everything else.
So they're mad. And Steve Gonzaldez, he turned the podium,
the lectern right to Coburger and spoke trying to make
eye contact with him, just directly going after him. And
then Kaylee Cancelvans, his sister, got up and I mean
(02:39):
just said all kinds of things going into him, saying
that you are You're not good at anything you do,
You're a coward, you're pathetic, you're a loser, your average,
You're basic. I see right through you. Then her mom
got up and essentially said, I'm looking forward to seeing
what the other inmates do to you in prison. So
(03:00):
as you had some more very emotional and sad and
then the Consulvans family and some other family members one
other and uncle talked about I would like to take
you out in the woods. He said, I wouldn't kill you,
God would do that, but I want to take you
out into the woods. And so a lot of anger
among the family members.
Speaker 1 (03:18):
What did I think? I know the answer? What did
Culberger dud? You're in all this?
Speaker 3 (03:23):
He didn't do anything. He was described to me by
somebody in the courtroom with us that this was the creepiest,
eeriest they had ever seen him. He sat looking straight
ahead the entire time. There was one little smirk at
one point when one of the family members made a
comment against him. Saying that he's no good and isn't
(03:43):
worth anything. But you know, the one thing they wanted
was a motive. And President Trump had gone on social
media saying, you know, judge, make him give you a motive.
That don't let him get away without telling it. The
judge did not have the legal ability to do that.
This was not part of the plea deal that was made.
That he was going to have to beyond admitting to
(04:04):
the crime, explaining the crime, and explaining why he did it.
And police and prosecutors they said they'll probably never know.
They still don't know. You know, I thought maybe they
knew behind the scenes with a gag order in place,
they don't know. But the judge said it doesn't matter.
Whatever Coberger says is going to be a lie. That
there's no way he can justify killing four college students,
(04:24):
that there is nothing that he can say that matters.
And the judge said, legally he can't compel him to
do it, and it wouldn't matter anyway.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
Can you can't? Can you put that in a plea
agreement to force someone to speak?
Speaker 3 (04:36):
They could have made it a plea in the agreement. Yeah,
And the Conservants family wanted that in the deal, but
the deal was already done and prosecutors did not put
it in there, and they also thought it would probably
derail the deal.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
Well, I mean, often you're dealing with a psychopath with
a weird obsession or compulsion. There is no why. He's
just mentally very it very sick. I mean, there is
there is no rational reason for this he's got.
Speaker 3 (05:04):
That's exactly what the judge said today, that that he
knows that there are people who are demanding that he
get up and explain why he did it, where the
murder weapon is, all of those things that they want
to know. But the judge said, it doesn't matter that
everything coming out of his narcissistic mouth would be a lie,
and it wouldn't matter.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
Yeah, yeah, it's not driven by reason. I find it
fascinating about human nature. People demand reasons. I understand why,
but that's not the way the human brain always works.
People can have obsessions and compulsions that make zero sense,
and it drives them to do, you know, ghastly things.
I mean, I think that's the root of a lot
of these cases. And unless you have that.
Speaker 3 (05:42):
I mean, essentially, I mean that's what we saw today
and then the judge said, that's why it doesn't matter
if you know, if he were to speak or not,
and and Coberger had the legal right he could have spoken.
But the only words he said in court today was
I respectfully declined when he was asked if he was
going to speak.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
So's there's no dangling issues here. There's no appeals, There's
there's no nothing.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
I mean, technically he's given up his right to appeal,
but under the Supreme Court he still has forty two
days to file some appeals if he wants to. But
as part of the plea deal, he promised he would
not appeal a lot of documents. The gag order is
being lifted. We're gonna learn a lot about the crime now,
but he's going to go to prison. That door is
going to shut on him after today.
Speaker 2 (06:23):
Alex Stone, ABC News, thank you.
Speaker 3 (06:26):
You got thanks up.
Speaker 2 (06:27):
In Idaho covering the Brian Coberg Coburger sentencing. Yes, it's
just an obsession of compulsion. They they they you know,
they build up anger and resentment inside them and they're
just born that way. They have done studies of people
who are are psychopaths, and their brains are constructed differently.
(06:48):
There's I think it's the amygdalah in in psychopaths, it's
it's much smaller, and that's where your conscience is. That's
where you're capable of guilt and remorse. They don't feel
guilt and remorse. That's why he's smirking while he's getting insulted.
It's almost pointless to be shouting at him. It bounces
(07:09):
right off. You're not damaging his ego. He's not capable
of feeling things. Whenever you have somebody in your life
who doesn't seem I mean a lot of executives are psychopaths.
That's why they can go into a company and fire
like five thousand people, and then they go home and
they go to bed, and people are wailing at home.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
How could he do this? That doesn't care. There's a
lot of people who don't care.
Speaker 2 (07:33):
I think at least four percent of the populations are sociopathic.
Speaker 5 (07:38):
I can't wrap my head around that. You know, when
people don't care for whatever reason, it just it really
is upsetting. I've encountered people like that in my life,
and I just, I guess so frustrated because I'm so different.
I'm very emotional and I have a lot of empathy
and sympathy and so rives me insane.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
Yeah, now it really is banging your head against the
brick wall. There's nothing you can do that breaks them.
They don't They're not wired that way.
Speaker 5 (08:07):
There, tough one, tough one man or woman.
Speaker 1 (08:10):
Yeah, when we come back.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
Now we have a homeless guy stabbed to death and
Brent Wood in front of a Whole Foods, which is
a sacred place.
Speaker 5 (08:19):
That's where John goes to pick up flowers and delicious food.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
That's right, my pets, my Whole Foods, dead homeless guy.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
Last night, helicopters. So the all bit.
Speaker 6 (08:33):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI Am
six forty.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
So I'm sitting on my couch last night, minding my
own business. I was alone.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
My wife had gone out with a couple of girlfriends
somebody's birthday. So I had a peaceful little night at
home and just watching old TV shows, which is what
I do.
Speaker 1 (08:55):
And I hear it.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
Of the helicopter, and I didn't want to know, And
I did not turn on the news. I did not
check any crime apps, didn't look at any news sites.
Nothing I knew something bad pretty close to us. In fact,
probably an air distance a half mile. I could see
(09:20):
the helicopters, those idiot TV helicopters.
Speaker 1 (09:26):
My wife comes home, she hears the thump, thump.
Speaker 2 (09:29):
All the shades get pulled down, pull the shades down,
all the shades in our den, all the shades in
the kitchen, all the shades in the front, the back,
besides flays in a nursing home. And then look at
(09:53):
the crime apps. She's got five of them. All this
showed up on all of them. Guy gets stabbed, abbed
by a homeless man, or a homeless man gets stabbed
by another homeless man. Nobody, nobody knew the exact details,
do we. I'm assuming the both these guys are homeless.
Speaker 5 (10:08):
Right now, we know that the homeless guy was stabbed.
The guy on the run, we don't know if he's homeless.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
And it happened in front of a Whole Foods, the
Whole Foods that I am said to against my will
so very often in life, to buy bizarre products that
I don't understand for my wife, foods that I would
never eat on my own. And uh, well, I do
buy flowers there. They have a good flower section.
Speaker 4 (10:35):
That's very nice.
Speaker 2 (10:35):
Of you.
Speaker 1 (10:36):
It is, it is. It is very nice. They have
good steak too, they do.
Speaker 2 (10:41):
My son has convinced me that their their meat is
very good and so I've made burgers with their meat,
and yeah, the steaks are good there. So it's not
a complete loss.
Speaker 5 (10:50):
And they have some good vegan desserts there I buy sometimes.
Speaker 2 (10:54):
I'll take your word for that you've had them before,
because you tell me what they were then. You never said, oh,
here's a vegan dessert from all foods. I'd remember that.
I'm not coming near you anymore. We've you got food,
all right. But here's the thing. I so, anyway, when
(11:14):
one guy stabs another guy, they got into some stupid argument,
and you know, he's left for dead on the sidewalk.
I think they took him to the hospital, but he
died there. And it's like, oh my god, we just
can't go anywhere. I mean, you know, it happened at
nine o'clock at night. I've gone there at nine o'clock
at night, or go to the drug store which is
(11:36):
a few doors down, but has you know some suspicious
client tell in the parking lot. At times, it's like,
why is it like this? I did well I bought
an ice house. I'm in a good neighborhood. Why do
I have to deal with this because we have an
idiot who's a mayor, a bunch of crooks at LASA,
(11:56):
all the freaking tax money. If I told you how
much tax money have paid in my life, the city
council people, I just just livid, absolutely livid.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
Why do they want this and why can't?
Speaker 2 (12:13):
And the thing is, you know, I'm sure all the
all the the the pale, skinny Whole Foods women, because
when I go in that store, there's just there's acres
of pale, skinny Whole Foods women and they're all lined
up with their little vegan delicacies.
Speaker 5 (12:30):
And they are they're not always they have.
Speaker 2 (12:36):
No blood in their bodies. They're all pale. They're practically transparent.
Speaker 5 (12:39):
Okay, I'm not pale. I'm not transparent and I'm not
that skinny. And I go to Whole Foods on occasion.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
Did I say you?
Speaker 5 (12:47):
Okay, but you're basically saying every one of them that
goes to Whole Foods, it looks like.
Speaker 2 (12:51):
That they're pale stick figures. They are, and I know
who they vote for. I know every single one of
them voted for Karen Bass, everyone of them. I know
who they vote for, and I'm sure they're all terrified.
But will any of them wake up this morning and say,
maybe we should vote differently, maybe there's another way to live.
(13:15):
I mean, because the women are scared more than men.
That's just natural. You know, you got you go, you're more,
you have less defenses on you. I just I don't understand.
I don't understand the people who vote the way they do,
believe in the politics they do, in the philosophy you do.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
And now you have.
Speaker 2 (13:32):
People getting stabbed to death in front of a Whole Foods.
That's like being stabbed to death in front of a
church that's sacred.
Speaker 5 (13:39):
Then I bet you if you ask some of those
people to go to Whole Foods, if they would vote
the way they've been voting in the past, they probably.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Would change their mind.
Speaker 5 (13:49):
I mean, look, it's the same thing, right the people
that lost their homes in the Palace days. I'm sure
a lot of those people voted for Karen Bass, and
I don't know if they're going to be voting for
her again.
Speaker 1 (13:58):
I think they flipped.
Speaker 2 (13:59):
Yeah, I'm hoping the Whole Foods crowd flipped.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
Apparently that's what's ha to happen.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
People have to die on the sidewalk in front of
Whole Foods before some of these thin pail the transparent
people say Wow, maybe I was wrong, Maybe this is
not a good way to go.
Speaker 1 (14:15):
We come back.
Speaker 2 (14:16):
Carl de Myles coming on because Gavin Newsome, he's realized
so many.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
People have fled the state.
Speaker 2 (14:24):
You know, we might lose five congressional seats, five electoral votes,
which is bad for Newsome. He's running for president and
he wants he wants to like, he wants to redraw
the congressional districts and CARLAMI is gonna explain this.
Speaker 1 (14:45):
Coming up.
Speaker 6 (14:47):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
Moistline for Friday's eight seven seven Moist eighty six eight
seven seven Moist eighty six of the iHeart Radio app.
We're gonna talk with the Carl a mile because Gavin
Newsom wants to redraw the congressional districts here in California,
and we're going to get to that in just a minute.
But Carl, I don't know if you heard, because this
(15:14):
news just broke a few minutes ago. But Newsom is
trying to find a buyer for one of the refineries
that's shutting down soon, the Valero refinery in Benetia.
Speaker 3 (15:28):
Good luck with that, I mean, you know, buyer beware.
Speaker 4 (15:31):
With all the costly mandates and regulations, the fact that
California has implemented the costly, greedy news steal or what
they call the Green New Deal, I don't know who
in the hell would want to buy any sort of
business in California, much less a refinery. And so Newsom
is an idiot. He's an idiot, and we're paying the
(15:54):
price for his mismanagement.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
Well that was that was and sweet, thank you. I
agree with you.
Speaker 4 (16:03):
I mean, it doesn't take much, It doesn't take much
analysis to kind of state made.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
No, that was the first thing I thought of. Who's
going to buy it? Even if Gavin Newsom calls up?
I don't know how how he thinks he's going to
influence anyone to buy and operate an oil refinery in
California with all the crushing regulation and taxes here.
Speaker 4 (16:26):
But all right, you have to wonder again what sort
of thought process he's untethered from reality? Okay, he thinks
that this is such a great place. But he doesn't
have to deal with the crime because he's got a
you know, armed security detail. He you know, obviously has
a bunch of money, so he doesn't have to worry
about the price of gas or the price of milk
or eggs. He's completely untethered from reality. He doesn't understand
(16:50):
how bad things are in his in his state.
Speaker 2 (16:52):
I understand when people live in a wealthy bubble that
they're not aware of what it's like, you know, down
below at the bottom of the hill. I have a
couple of acquaintances who are like that, and I talked
to them about what's going on, and they just stare
at me. They literally have no idea. I don't understand him, though.
I mean, he gets crap every day for the way
California is. He's constantly out there defending it. He's constantly
(17:14):
debating it. How can he be out of touch? Does
he think everyone who's complaining about all the obvious things
that we're all insane?
Speaker 4 (17:23):
I think he is not out of touch. But he's
also a very capable liar. This is someone who's very ambitious.
He's always been handed things in his life. He's been
anointed by very rich special interests and never earned it.
It's always been granted to him, given to him, gifted
to him, and he, you know, is just a very
(17:44):
The one thing he does very well is he's a
very capable liar, so he knows what he's saying is untrue.
But he's seeking higher office and you know, the media
has let him get away with it for the most part.
And you know, I think that he's gonna have a
problem when he goes to the national stage running for
isn't it, Because while most of the California media is
(18:04):
in the tank for him, it hasn't held him accountable.
That's not going to be the case nationally, and his
record is about to be very much exposed, and I
think it's long overdue, all right.
Speaker 2 (18:14):
Going to the other issue, he wants to redraw the
congressional districts because in Texas, the Governor Greg Abbott is
redrawing the districts there in order to get more Republican
leaning districts ahead of the twenty twenty six mid term elections.
So Newsom wants to gin up the Democratic leaning districts
(18:36):
here in California.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
Can he do this.
Speaker 4 (18:41):
Well? First and foremost, it shouldn't be done in Texas.
It shouldn't be done in California or anywhere, because I
don't believe politicians should be choosing the voters. And that's
what jerrymandering is. That's what this redistricting scheme is. It's
drawing lines and manipulating lines of congressional districts so that
the politicians are protected and that they get to select
(19:03):
what voters they get to face, versus the voters deciding
in fair drawn districts who they want to represent them.
And remember, districts should not be about which party wins.
And again I'm criticizing Texas for this, as well as
Gavinussom for jerry mandering. I think it's repugnant, it's corrupt,
it's illegitimate. It's not how our democracy should work. Lines
(19:27):
for districts should reflect natural boundaries, communities of interest, they
should really reflect common ties. That's not what jerry mandering is.
It's all designed to favor one political party over another.
We have an independent redistricting process in California. It's not
perfect and didn't particularly like how the last one was manipulated,
(19:49):
but it is designed to put this issue in the
hands of independent citizens. And what Nwsom is proposing to
do is to violate our state constant. He probably is
getting legal advice that it is going to violate our
state constitution, and he will be sued by Reform California
and ME or a multitude of other factions. And so
(20:11):
I believe what he's going to do is order up
a you know, eleven million dollars special elections statewide. Actually
it's going to be more than that, you know. The
idea is that it would be more than a neighborhood
of forty to fifty million dollars to put his redistricting
scam on the ballot. And he'll say it's about fair districts,
when in fact it's not, and he's going to try
(20:33):
to bamboozle the public. I don't think he's going to
win that election. Actually, I believe that Californians can smell
a rat and even though they're Democrat leaning voters in California,
they know that politicians like the jerry mander and they
don't like jerrymandering. They want to make sure that these
districts are fair. So if Newsom wants to square off
on the on the you know, the playing field at
(20:55):
the ballot box. I say, bring it on here, Joe.
We will absolutely, you know, make the case that Jerrymander
districts you should never come back to California.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (21:06):
They draw the districts and they're really odd shaped. There's
a lot of swiggling lines as they strain to try
to draw in more Democrat votes or Republican votes, and
you end up with these sprawling, weirdly shaped carve outs
that don't really make any sense. There's nothing that binds
a lot of these people that they should be want
(21:27):
one voting block.
Speaker 4 (21:29):
Yeah. I saw one map where they drew a line
all the way and had Maxine Waters representing Pacific Palisades.
Isn't that wonderful?
Speaker 2 (21:37):
You know?
Speaker 4 (21:38):
I guess they're never representing an insane asylum, you know,
not not a congressional district, but Pacific Palisades. Please.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
Oh well, all right, Carl, very good.
Speaker 4 (21:48):
You get squat there and become a resident who knows.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
All right, Carl, we'll talk again soon. Thank you for
coming on.
Speaker 3 (21:55):
Appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (21:56):
Carl.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
Demayah, well we come back more on Newsome. I told
you he's screwed, he's cornered. The refineries are closing, the
gas prices can shoot up over eight bucks. He wants
to run for president. Now he wants to find a
buyer for one of the refineries.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
Why doesn't he buy it?
Speaker 2 (22:16):
You know, I wonder what the refinery would go for.
I mean, there's not much profit in oil in California.
It's very expensive. That's why they're closing it. They're losing money.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
He can afford a nine million dollar house. He can
afford his own oil refinery.
Speaker 6 (22:31):
You're listening to John Cobelts on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 2 (22:36):
John coblt We're on one to four and then after
four o'clock the podcast John cobelt Show on demand and
whatever you missed today you can hear.
Speaker 1 (22:46):
Then.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
We just had Carl Demile on and right before he
came on the air, we got the news and we've
been warning you about this. I'm telling you all the
gas warnings, gas price warnings we've been giving you. They're
all going to come to pass. And you look at
Gavin Newsom's behavior. He knows trouble is coming. When was
(23:12):
the last time you heard about a governor wanting to
buy an oil refinery. Gavin Newsom has successful, successfully crushed
the oil business in California. Every day that he has
served in government. He totally sold out to the climate
change fanatics. And the oil companies have to work under
(23:35):
a tremendous amount of very expensive regulations. And there's very
expensive taxes that we pay that they pay and then
they pass along to us. So it's all taxes that
we pay. It's about at least a dollar fifty a
gallon over what we pay over what other states pay.
(23:59):
And there's two more fineries closing, one in Valera. One
is Valero in Benetia. The other is Phillip sixty six
down in Los Angeles West, which is the town that
the that the Phillip sixty six is well, it's down
(24:20):
in the South Bay area, Wilmington, that's right, Wilmington. Okay,
So one in Wilmington, one in Benetia. And now Newsom
is stepping in. He's trying to broker a deal to
find a buyer urgently, find a buyer for the Venetia refinery.
It's going to close in April of twenty twenty six.
(24:43):
They're talking to Sinclair, they're talking to a European energy
firm because if they lose the refining capacity in Benetia
and in Wilmington, then the gasoline production is going to
dropped by seventeen percent, maybe as much as twenty percent. So,
(25:06):
in desperation, the California Energy Commission is trying to broker
a deal with support from the Governor's office. Otherwise the
oil and gas market is going to be severely disrupted
steep price hikes. State modeling suggests that removing Benetia from
the refining system could pump prices towards eight dollars a gallon. Well,
(25:28):
that's what Michael mcche was saying. Michael mcchee was saying this,
and you know what Gavin Newsom did his He had
his nerdy little goons on social media try to spere
smear mache as some kind of tool of the saudis
total lie. Carla Meyo talked about how easy it is
(25:53):
for Gavin Newsom to lie. He not only lies easily,
he gets the people who work for him to lie
easily and smear because he can't take any criticism because
nearly all the criticism is true. This is such incredible incompetence.
The lifeblood of modern civilization is oil and gas. We
(26:16):
don't exist without it. And he has bled the oil
companies dry with excessive taxes and excessive regulation.
Speaker 1 (26:26):
He's bled us dry too.
Speaker 2 (26:29):
And now that this whole story reached its logical end,
you create a situation where it's impossible for oil companies
to make profits, what do you think they're going to do.
They're going to go out of business.
Speaker 1 (26:49):
This is simple. A plus B equal C.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
A is too much regulation, B is too many too
many taxes equals C. Oil refinery goes out of business.
Speaker 1 (26:58):
They close.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
And now he's looking at two closing in Wilmington and Benetia,
and he's going, oh, oh, we're going to lose seventeen
percent of the capacity.
Speaker 1 (27:09):
Gas is going to be eight dollars a gallon.
Speaker 2 (27:11):
Uh oh, what a schmuck, What a stupid little child.
Why would you if you had even the slightest bit
of understanding of business and economics in the oil industry,
you would allow the oil industry to make whatever profit
they can because they will compete for customers to keep
(27:35):
prices at a reasonable level. Competition keeps prices reasonable and affordable.
And it works in the other forty nine states back east,
their states selling gas for two dollars and seventy cents,
and the oil companies are making profits at two seventy.
Here it's four point fifty and they can't make a profit.
Speaker 1 (27:55):
What does that tell you?
Speaker 2 (28:01):
Yeah, I suppose if they talked this in the schools,
right from the beginning, the whole everybody in the public
would understand and not get caught up in all these
weird cults companies, price gougers, all climate change is gonna
kill us.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
It's all nonsense. It's bs it nonsense, it's garbage.
Speaker 2 (28:20):
And you follow these these these stupid cults hatred of
oil companies, worshiping climate change.
Speaker 1 (28:27):
What do you get?
Speaker 2 (28:28):
Well, fine, here, you got it your way. You don't
want us to burn oil and gas? Fine, oil companies
will close? Oh wait, where you can't close? It's gonna
be eight bucks agoing? Oh wait, wait wait, who's gonna
vote for me? Yeah, I'm Gavin Newsome. I'm from California.
In my state, we pay eight dollars a gallon for gas. Yeah,
that's gonna rack up a lot of votes. Who in
(28:50):
the other forty nine states is going to vote for
eight dollar gas? I mean maybe here that's we're gonna
do a lot on this Tomorrow we're gonna have my
mache on from USC to talk about all this. This
is the logical end of the road, all right. Conway's
up next. We got Crozer with the news live in
the KFI twenty four hour Newsroom. Hey, you've been listening
(29:12):
to the John Cobalt Show podcast. You can always hear
the show live on KFI Am six forty from one
to four pm every Monday through Friday, and of course,
anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.